The Late Night host was referring to Matt Lauer, his now-former colleague at NBC who was fired late Tuesday following an allegation of sexual harassment. The scandal quickly snowballed after Variety released a report detailing specifics of Lauer’s alleged actions over the years as a co-host of the Today show. On Thursday, Lauer released a statement, writing, “To the people I have hurt, I am truly sorry. As I am writing this, I realize the depth of the damage and disappointment I have left behind at home and at NBC. Some of what is being said about me is untrue or mischaracterized, but there is enough truth in these stories to make me feel embarrassed and ashamed. I regret that my shame is now shared by the people I cherish dearly.”

Meyers pre-taped his show on Wednesday night, so he was unable to chime in alongside his late-night contemporaries the day word of Lauer’s firing broke. But Meyers went deep Thursday night, dedicating a “Closer Look” to the subject and weaving in allegations against Donald Trump and John Conyers as well. Among the accusations leveled against Lauer is the allegation that he once gave a female colleague a sex toy, along with instructions on “how he wanted to use it on her,” per Variety. Meyers’s reply? “As a general rule, if you’re giving someone a dildo at work, you’re the dildo at work.”

The most widely discussed portion of the Variety story might have been the detail that Lauer allegedly had a button installed under his desk that allowed him to lock his office door without getting up. Although the button sounds nefarious on its face, it’s been noted that other high-power figures at NBC and elsewhere have similar devices as a security measure and, as one “insider” put it, “an ego thing.” If that’s the case, however, it seems Meyers and his team have not been inducted into this strange society: “Let me address anyone who works in the button-installing business, if I may,” the comedian said. “Nobody wants a button under their desk for a non-evil reason. No one’s ever said, ‘I need a button under my desk that will release kittens when my interns are feeling blue.’“

But Meyers’s most scathing comment came when he addressed Lauer’s alleged hobby of playing “Fuck, Marry, Kill” with his staff. “I don’t know who you said you’d marry in those conversations,” Meyers said, “but I do know you killed your career and fucked yourself.”